Association of Changes in Work Shifts and Shift Intensity With Change in Fatigue and Disturbed Sleep

The aim of this study was to examine whether changes in work shifts and shift intensity are related to changes in difficulties falling asleep, fatigue, and sleep length.

Questionnaire responses of hospital employees in 2008, 2012, 2014 and 2015 were linked to daily-based records of working hours during three months preceding each survey. Conditional logistic regression and longitudinal fixed-effects analyses was used to investigate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for each 25% within-individual change in the proportion of working hour characteristics in relation to changes in fatigue, difficulties to fall asleep, and 24-hour sleep length.

Change in night but not in morning or evening shifts was associated with parallel changes in odds for longer sleep length and fatigue during free days. Similarly, short shift intervals and having >2 but not >4 consecutive night shifts were associated with increased odds of fatigue during work and difficulties falling asleep. Among workers aged ≥50 years, the associations were the strongest between night shifts and longer sleep and between higher proportion of short-shift intervals and fatigue during free days.

Among shift workers with fatigue or sleep problems, decreasing the proportion of night shifts and quick returns and giving preference to quickly forward-rotating shift systems may reduce fatigue.

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